Baltimore Kinetic Sculpture Race2014 Race Report: Tick Tock The Croc

Want to See the Next Race?For an email reminder 1 month before the race on 2 May 2015, and when the
2015 Spectator’s Guide is available, join the Spectator Mailing List!

Saturday 3 May 2014

The long harsh Baltimore winter finally gave way to Spring, and on the first Saturday of May the sculptures come out to play.
With 31 sculptures from 24 teams, spectators got their money’s worth as spectacular sculptures returned with major revisions,
including the now-missing PLATYPUS and Alice’s caterpillar metamorphosed into Peter Pan’s Grand Mediocre crocodile.

With six agile photographers leaping throughout the racecourse, KineticBaltimore.com is proud to bring you this year’s coverage.
Thanks to further investment in cameras, this year’s images have 56% more pixels than last year, and more than twice as many as our 2009 coverage.

Click the “Next Page >” button to go to the next team, or select any of the list of teams at the
bottom of the page.

To see others’ coverage of the race, or to tell others about your race experiences, be sure to check out the Kinetic Forum.

Tick Tock the Croc

Sweeping an astonishing collection of awards, Tick Tock the Croc
was awarded
Grand Mediocre and Art by the judges,
People’s Choice by the people, and
Marine Posse Favorite by the Kinetic Kayak Rescue & Repair teams.

The Kinetic Race Rules require sculptures be 35 feet long or shorter. Why not make it 35?

This isn’t just any crocodile. This is the crocodile to which Peter Pan fed Captain Hook's hand.

Oars popped out the sides on the harbor as two pilots turned to face the tail.
This is the second sinuous children’s fantasy animal atop this 6-pilot chassis. From 2010–2013,
it was the foundation for Go Ask Alice, the blue hookah-smoking caterpillar from Alice in Wonderland: